When managing land for biological systems, there are many
factors over which you have no control.
Some of these have an enormous influence over your success. A prime example is the weather. Yesterday evening, Blue Jay Barrens was
visited by a thunderstorm exhibiting high wind, heavy rain and hail. Physical evidence of the storm’s passing was
abundant. Downed tree limbs, broken
plant stalks and flooding were found everywhere. What I observed from the relative safety of
the front porch, was the toppling of the milkweeds. It all began with the simultaneous arrival of
howling straight line winds and a heavy downpour of rain that sent an
impressive wave of water spray breaking over the eves.
Wind and rain subsided slightly as a flurry of hailstones
joined the mix.
Milkweeds near the water garden, heavy with rain and
battered by hail, began to give way before the wind.
As the hail thinned, rain increased in intensity. Several milkweeds have remained upright. At this point, I was thinking the worst of
the storm had passed.
I was wrong. Heavy
rain continued, hail resumed and the wind returned with a roar loud enough to
send me running to the other side of the house to see if anything dangerous was
headed in my direction. When I returned to
the porch 20 seconds later, the wind was driving straight down and pushing
spray into the porch and onto the ceiling.
We went from hurricane like conditions to a light summer
shower in just a few seconds. I watched
the back end of the storm thrash the woods on the hill across the road and then
it was gone. Amazingly, some milkweeds
are still standing.
Violent summer weather may be uncontrollable, but that
doesn’t mean it’s unpredictable or unexpected.
The milkweeds around the water garden, as well as many out in the
fields, get flattened every year.
Younger specimens can almost bring themselves back upright after a
storm, while those at this stage will gradually reorient the top of the plant
so the flowers are held up for insect visitors.
Their susceptibility to storm damage does not diminish their importance
as a valuable part of the natural ecosystem.
The milkweed stalks have not broken at the base and can be
returned to an upright position if stakes are provided for support. Since these are growing right outside the
front door, I’ll do my best to return them to their proper orientation. My wife claims that they remind her of
Triffids lurking in wait near the porch and I don’t want them to appear as
though they are reaching out to her.
The leaves will carry their hail damage for the rest of the
season. The milkweeds colonized the
water garden flower beds on their own several years ago. I left them alone to grow and increase their
numbers because this patch seemed to be a preferred egg laying site of the
Monarch butterfly. Monarch caterpillars
have always been present on these plants by this date in past years and
evidence of their feeding should be present on the leaves right along with the
hail damage. This year I have yet to see
my first Monarch. Plenty of other
insects utilize the milkweed, but it just doesn’t seem right without the
Monarchs.
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Ed routinely mows some of our milkweed to extend the season of green leaves and flowers. I'm sure your milkweed will make the best of even that horrible situation.. I hope this is not the year that the Monarchs never arrive!
ReplyDeleteHi Becky. I've read that Monarchs have already arrived in Canada, so the northern migration may have passed me by. Maybe a few will come my way on the trip south.
ReplyDeleteHI Steve.... Wow that was an impressive little storm you got there!! Glad it was you and not me!! The cat would be under the bed for days in fact I probably would be there with her for a bit !! : }
ReplyDeleteThere is a good crop of milk weed in the fields near me ,but the problem is when they hay the fields the Milkweed is cut too !!
I am hoping for a good year for the Monarch after last year just about no show!!
Grace
Keep your lead bottom shoes on!!
Hi Grace. We had another storm last night, but it wasn’t quite as bad. I had to give up the lead bottom shoes because they were a potential environmental hazard. Now I use concrete galoshes.
ReplyDelete